Movies watched in June and July 2012

I never did a list for June, so I’ll have to combine June and July.

flypaper

Flypaper

This 2011 thriller tells the story of a man who finds himself trapped in a bank as it is robbed by two sets of criminals at the same time.  The man decides to play detective and tries to figure out what is going on.  This film was on TV during a free trial of some movie channel on DirecTV.  Most of the humor was too raunchy or stupid for me, but it did have some funny parts.  It did have an interesting and engaging whodunit mystery to it, which did keep me guessing until the end, yet still made sense; not an easy accomplishment, so I applaud the writers for that.  I enjoyed the mystery of it.  Fun movie, but the raunchy humor will probably prevent me from ever wanting to watch it again.

raisingarizona

Raising Arizona

I got this 1987 film as part of a blu-ray 4-pack called From the Minds of the Coen Brothers, which was on sale at Best Buy for $20.  The other films included Blood Simple, Fargo, and Miller’s Crossing.  I really just wanted Miller’s Crossing, as it was the only film in the pack I had seen, but I had seen pieces of Fargo on TV and wanted to see that as well.  And $20 seemed like a great value for four blu-rays.  Anyway, Raising Arizona tells the story of a man and wife who can’t have children, so they decide to steal a baby from a local rich man who they think has too many.  Of course you know they’re going to eventually change their hearts and realize that stealing a baby is not OK, but it’s a comedy.  While there were some funny parts, most of it was just too off the wall and far-fetched for me.

bloodsimple

Blood Simple

This 1985 Coen Brothers film tells a story about . . . uh . . . hmmm.  It’s kind of all over the place.  One guy hires a hit man to kill his ex-wife’s new love interest.  But the hit man has plans of his own, as does just about everyone else.  Murder, attempted murder, and evidence cover-ups abound.  I found it more humorous than Raising Arizona, and the story was engaging.  Fun movie.

kevin

We Need to Talk About Kevin

This 2011 film tells the story of a mother’s difficult relationship with her son, and how she copes with life after her son is goes on a killing spree at school.  The premise makes you think the story will explore some pretty tough emotional places.  After all, what leads people to do such horrendous things?  Unfortunately the characters made no sense.  They got mad and angry and sad and manipulative and frustrated for no understandable reasons, which made their actions even less understandable.  It’s as if they were all brooding over doubts on the worth of the point of existing at all, every now and then doing something for the sake of moving the story along.  I didn’t understand this film.

extremelyloud

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

This 2011 film tells the story of a middle-grade child who loses his father in the 9/11 tragedy.  He discovers a mysterious key his father left behind, and, as a way of coping with his father’s death, sets out to find what the key goes to.  I enjoyed some things about this film.  I liked the premise, and the acting was good, especially Max von Sydow as an elderly mute.  Unfortunately the emotional impact of the tragedy that begins the story was lessened for me by the disjointed way it unfolds.  Instead of letting us see everything that happens to the protagonist on 9/11, the writers keep important parts of that tragic day a secret throughout the film, until the protagonist reveals it at the climax.  By then, it had lost a significant amount of its potential emotional punch.  Overall, good film, but with some glaring weaknesses.  (Also, somebody destroy that tambourine please.)

humancondition3

The Human Condition – Part 3: A Soldier’s Prayer

This 1961 film is the final installment of the epic trilogy of The Human Condition.  Our main character Kaji escapes from the battlefield and attempts to journey home.  But the country is still distressed by the hardships of war, and Kaji has many battles left to fight, even if not with his gun.  Great (if tragic) conclusion to the great (if tragic) trilogy.

starfighter

The Last Starfighter

This 1984 film is based on the daydream that a popular video game is actually a test for recruiters fighting space battles.  The effects are charmingly cheesy and the story is weak, but there’s a spirit in the film that the filmmakers know this and are making it anyway, because it’s fun.  The biggest story weakness was that the setup takes so long, the protagonist goes to such great lengths to refuse his quest, that when he finally accepts what he must do, it’s time for the film’s climax.  It makes the point of his quest seem unimportant, as if all he ever had to do was push a button.  Boring movie.

silencelambs

The Silence of the Lambs

This classic 1991 thriller tells the story of an FBI agent who enlists the help of the deadly psychopath cannibal Hannibal Lecter to help her track down a serial killer on the loose.  I found Hannibal’s cannibalism, or at least its portrayal, to be more comic than disturbing, but the other serial killer, and what he likes to collect from his victims, was quite disturbing indeed.  I want to say it was a fun movie, but it was really more disgusting than anything else.

manonledge

Man on a Ledge

This 2012 thriller tells the story of a man who walks out on the ledge of a tall building, appearing to be pondering suicide.  But there’s more to his plan than meets the eyes, as it’s really part of an elaborate plot to clear his name from a crime he was framed for.  It was all kind of confusing and farfetched, but fun, I guess.

prometheus

Prometheus

This 2012 sci-fi movie from director Ridley Scott is the prequel to Alien, which I have yet to see.  Anyway, a team of scientists land on an alien planet to investigate . . . something.  I can’t remember.  And then, oh no, there are evil alien things that want to kill them!  Oh no!  OK, it was actually much more engaging than I can make it sound.  And the 3D effects, especially the crashing of the spaceship, were quite beautiful to watch on the big screen.  It had a great music score as well.  I’m not sure if the writers are people of faith, but there is a character who is asked why he believes something, and he replies something like, “It’s what I choose to believe.”  If you’re a person of faith and this answer makes sense to you, that’s fine.  But if I were an atheist and asking this question in honesty, the answer seems rather arbitrary, if not circular.  Why not believe something else?  Why is this what you choose?  Can’t you be more specific?  It would’ve been nice if the film had let faith dig a little deeper than settling with what might be understood as an arbitrary choice.  Also, there’s a robot character who claims that lack of emotions make him better able to make good decisions.  Similar to the reason the character of Spock annoys me, I don’t understand this notion.  To make a decision is to have an emotion.  Emotion is an aid to decision making.  I don’t understand the notion that the emotion and decision-making can be or should be divorced, as if emotions are somehow prevented from ever being rational themselves.  Anyway, Prometheus was a fun movie, even if I have philosophical problems with some of the characters.

seventhseal

The Seventh Seal

This 1957 Ingmar Bergman film explores the nature of how man lives constantly trapped in the shadow of death as a man challenges death himself to a chess match when he comes calling.  The premise makes the film sound more interesting than it is, as it really doesn’t explore any deep ethical or philosophical ideas about death.  It just says, “Oh my, we’re all going to die!  Isn’t that interesting to think about!”  Really?  Gee, I never thought of that before!  Still, there’s something fantastically fascinating about making death a character, instead of just some shadowy theme that hangs around in metaphors.  Somewhat fun movie, but mostly boring.

burnnotice4

Burn Notice – Season 4

Finished watching the fourth season of Burn Notice from 2010 on DVD.  Another fun season; the fast paced thrilling action, intriguing villains, creative solutions to messy situations, and fiery explosions remain as addicting as salty potato chips without the side-effects of over-eating.  I look forward to more seasons, whenever I can get my hands on the DVDs.

fargo

Fargo

This 1996 Coen Brothers comedy was darkly hilarious.  A man hatches a plan to have his own wife kidnapped so that his father-in-law will pay a ransom, which he’ll get a cut of.  But things go wrong, of course, people get murdered, and the sweet charming hospitable police woman Marge investigates.  The hilarity lies in the over-the-top situations (oddly the very same reason Raising Arizona didn’t work for me), mixed with the believable acting, from the warm and welcoming Marge to the terribly annoying Jerry Lundegaard.  Great movie.

devilsbackbone

The Devil’s Backbone

This 2001 film from director Guillermo del Toro tells the story of a boy who’s dropped off at an orphanage for boys during the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s.  And, wouldn’t you know it, the orphanage is haunted by a young ghost boy who was murdered by someone working there at the orphanage.  Like del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, while there is some ugly violence to the drama, under the story there’s a peaceful and welcoming assurance that you that as long as your heart is in the right place, the world’s ugliness is really nothing to fear.  Great movie.

chronicle

Chronicle

This 2012 action comedy tells the story of three teenagers who obtain super powers.  But one of the teenagers is so angsty, that he uses his powers for evil!  While the premise was fun, and the parts meant to be humorous were fun, the overall story didn’t make much sense, as the characters’ motivations for doing things didn’t make much sense (hey, teenagers go to parties, let’s have that).  I think the biggest problem was that the story was told from the POV of a handheld camera, as in Cloverfield.  But, in Chronicle, there’s no reason for it at all.  If you really gained super powers, why in the world would your first thought be to record it all on camera?  It makes many of the elements of the story seem forced as the filmmakers wonder, “Hmmm, how do we work that handheld camera in this scene?”  Disappointing movie.

ran

Ran

This 1985 film was the last epic from director Akira Kurosawa, and starred Tatsuya Nakadai (Kaji from The Human Condition).  It’s very much a retelling of King Lear set in ancient Japan.  A powerful ruler decides to abdicate his powerful position and split his lands between his three sons, who of course do not want to listen to their father for one reason or another.  Battle and tragedy ensue.  As in Kagemusha, it seems Kurosawa loved over-the-top, almost frightening make-up to show his main character’s descent into tragic madness.  The photography was also very flat, like grand paintings, which made the film seem as if you were watching moving illustrations in some history book rather than realistic intimate depictions, but I imagine this is what Kurosawa was going for.  While this film certainly had some great moments, I could hardly stand just sitting there watching the white-faced Nakadai stare blankly at the screen.  Some of the battles also dragged on and on (though it didn’t get as bad as the dying horses in Kagemusha).  Overall, though, fun film.

dinnergame

The Dinner Game

This 1998 French comedy tells the story a man who plays a “dinner game” which involves finding someone he thinks is an idiot and bringing him to dinner as a guest so that he and his intellectual friends can make fun of the idiocy of each other’s idiots.  (It was remade in America as Dinner for Schmucks, which I’m guessing was much more raunchy and probably dumber.)  Unfortunately, he never gets to the dinner, as he throws out his back, and his wife leaves him.  And who’s there to help him through the situation?  The idiot he invited inside, of course, who only makes things worse.  Most of the movie takes place on one night in one room as the idiot tries to help the man track down his wife through phone conversations and inviting other friends over, a bit like an extended sitcom.  Pretty hilarious movie.

monkeys

12 Monkeys

This 1995 wacky sci-fi from Terry Gilliam didn’t make any sense.  A man from a post-apocalyptic future is sent back to the past to uncover how a deadly toxin came to destroy much of the breathable air on the Earth’s surface.  And it has something to do with an underground organization called “12 Monkeys.”  It could hardly follow it, or perhaps I just wasn’t interested in trying.

harakiri

Harakiri

This 1962 film from director Masaki Kobayashi (director of The Human Condition) and yet again starring Tatsuya Nakadai tells the tale of a samurai who arrives at an estate and requests to use their courtyard to commit harakiri (suicide consisting of sticking a blade into your gut and slicing open your intestines).  But before he does, he tells the story of why he’s really there, revealing how tragically immoral and hypocritical the warriors of the estate are.  Great film.  (On a side note, the film was remade in 3D in 2011 by director Takashi Miike.  Unfortunately I don’t think I’ll have the opportunity to see it in 3D in theaters, as theaters around here don’t play foreign films, but I would definitely like to see it at some point.  Miike’s 13 Assassins was great, though his portrayal of violence and disturbing imagery is sometimes too over-the-top for me.)

cinema

Cinema Paradiso

This 1988 film tells the story of a young boy who grows up in the 1940s and 50s obsessed with films.  He grows fond of the local cinema’s projectionist, begging to learn how the projector works.  Later, he becomes interested in making his own films, but remains close friends with the projectionist.  The story is great, as is the incredibly beautiful musical score by Ennio Morricone.  Great movie, and I think the ending scene, even if a bit predictable, is the best ending of any film I’ve ever seen.

rublev

Andrei Rublev

This boring film from 1966 tells the story of artist Andrei Rublev as he struggles with his life and faith in the poverty and violence-filled 15th century medieval Russia.  While most of the film was rather boring, I admit I was on the edge of my seat watching to see whether or not the giant bell they make near the end of the film would work or not.  But the rest of the film was rather boring.  Now and then there were some interesting religious and philosophical discussions, but nothing mind-bendingly engaging.

west

Once Upon a Time in the West

This 1968 spaghetti western from director Sergio Leone tells the story of a woman who inherits a piece of land which is worth a great fortune due to its location.  Gun battles ensue over twisted plots of killing or protecting the landowner.  Another great score from Ennio Morricone.  While the pace was sometimes slow, I thought if it was any faster it might’ve been hard to understand the constant twists and turns of the long story.  Great film.

z

Z

This 1969 French political thriller tells the story of the aftermath of the assassination of some important politician (yeah, I don’t know my world political history).  While the film makes you want to see the assassinators caught and the conspiracy uncovered, it doesn’t bring you to the edge of your seat about it.  It reminded me a bit of The French Connection, in how the story is told with handheld-ish documentary-style cameras, running through the streets alongside people.  Overall it was kind of boring.

brave

Brave

Pixar’s new 2012 film tells the story of a princess who, in typical princess fashion, doesn’t want to marry any of the uncharming princes offered to her.  But the real story begins when she accidentally puts a magical curse upon her mother, and must strive to break the spell and mend their relationship.  Unfortunately, the story was a bit of a mess, especially for Pixar’s usually high standards.  The main problem was lack of focus.  The conflict starts out as a princess battling a fate forced upon her, then turns into a relationship conflict.  Add in a magic system that makes little sense and some characters that have no personality and only speak for comic relief, and the end result is a bit of a hodge-podge.  Despite the mess, there are some nice heartfelt moments.  Finally, the title makes no sense, as bravery is only a thin thread of a theme in the film.  The original title, The Bear and the Bow, fits much better, in my opinion.  (You can go ahead and hire me as a creative executive, Pixar.)

redoctober

The Hunt for Red October

Based on the Tom Clancy novel, this 1990 thriller tells the story of the Soviet captain of a submarine called “Red October.”  He abandons his orders and goes rogue.  Now it’s up to Jack Ryan to find out why and prevent a war from starting when both nations are already on edge.  Fun movie.  It also has a great music score.

magician

The Magician

This 1958 film from director Ingmar Bergman once again stars Max von Sydow, this time as a mysterious magician.  When he and his troupe are investigated for fraud, the magician must prove what his acts are all about.  It reminded me a bit of The Prestige; there’s an interesting theme about how artists relate to their audiences, how both artists and audiences know it’s all a trick, but art is about letting oneself be manipulated for the sake of experiencing emotions.  Great film.

usualsuspects

The Usual Suspects

This 1995 movie tells the story of . . . oh, who cares?  This movie was dumb.

insidious

Insidious

This 2011 horror thriller tells the story of a kid who slips into a coma while something strange and mysterious begins haunting his family’s new house.  Things go from cheesy to ultra-super-cheesy when it is revealed just what is haunting the house and how to set things right.  But it was so ridiculous, that it was actually somewhat fun to watch.

terminator

The Terminator

This classic 1984 film tells the story of the infamous killing robot and the victim he pursues, the famous Sarah Connor.  How this ever became popular, I don’t know.  I reckon the sequel elevated its status?  This is really a cheesy, poorly written piece of slop.

orphanage

The Orphanage

This 2007 thriller tells the haunting tale of a woman who lives in a house that used to be an orphanage.  One day, her son tragically goes missing.  To find him, the woman will have to uncover what happened to the children of the orphanage.  This is one of the few ghost stories I’ve found to be both genuinely creepy and heartfelt at the same time.  The other one that comes to mind is The Sixth Sense.  Though quite tragic, this was a great film.

musketeers

The Three Musketeers

I was curious to see how airships would play into the 2011 remake of The Three Musketeers.  But the airships weren’t that epic.  The entire premise for the daring swordfights and sky battles center around . . . getting the Queen’s necklace back so that her husband will not think she’s cheating on him, which, because of other convoluted circumstances, will prevent war.  Not exactly the most exciting plot device to get the conflict going.  But James Corden was funny.

uwm

Unknown White Male

This 2005 documentary follows the aftermath of a young man who suddenly mysteriously suffers from severe amnesia, forgetting almost everything about his life and who he is.  It’s interesting for about ten minutes as one wonders, “Woah, what would that do to a person’s life?”  And then it’s just a bit boring.  Might’ve been more interesting if the filmmaker had waited ten years or so to revisit the young man to see how his life had changed since his amnesia, what sort of friends he kept and what sort of friends he lost, how his personality changed, etc.

artist

The Artist

This Oscar-winning 2011 silent black-and-white film tells the story of a film star who struggles with the film industry’s transition to the “talkies.”  While the premise was fine, it felt like only twenty minutes of story stretched out over an hour and a half, making it extremely boring.  I’m surprised I sat through it.  Too much character brooding.  Boring film.  And, really, if you want to enjoy the novelty of a silent film, watch a real one.  They’re much better.  Filmmakers had to work within the confines of silence; they didn’t use it as a gimmick.

illusionist

The Illusionist

This 2010 animated film tells the story of a young girl who grows attached to a traveling illusionist, who she seems to believe is a real magician.  The illusionist is kind, and is happy to please his biggest fan, but the girl begins to want more and more worldly pleasures.  The illusionist is torn between keeping his biggest fan pleased and happy, or revealing that he’s just an illusionist, and that all his work is just a trick.  Great film.  Certainly not the sort of warm-fuzzy animated film you’d get from America (not that that’s good or bad, only that it’s refreshing to see an animated film with a different tone).

lovelybones

The Lovely Bones

I was curious to see Peter Jackson’s 2009 film based on Alice Sebold’s book.  The film tells the story of a young girl who is murdered and, from beyond the grave, tries to cope with her death and tries to help her family find her killer.  The premise certainly had potential, but unfortunately it seemed like the film forgot its original premise at the end, or didn’t properly set up the conflict the story was meant to resolve.  The films jumps to the killer wanting to not get caught, to the father trying to cope with the tragedy, to the dead girl wondering through the surrealist afterlife trying to figure out what she wants to do now that she’s dead.  It was just a bit too much of a mess.

tsotsi

Tsotsi

I wanted to check out some of director Gavin Hood’s work, as I’m quite curious to see how he’ll handle Ender’s Game.  This 2005 foreign film tells the story of Tsotsi, a poor thief who shoots a woman and steals her car, only to discover a baby in the backseat.  He grows attached to the baby, despite having no means to care for it, and must come to terms with the sorry state of his life.  This could’ve been a powerful movie, but unfortunately the character of Tsotsi was just too evil for me to feel much sympathy for his plight.  He seems to have no remorse over the murders he’s involved in, and seems to have no problem pulling a gun on people and ordering them around.  His tragic childhood and his attachment to the baby do not excuse his behavior.  I suppose he changes by the end of the film, but it wasn’t quite enough for me.  Anyway, after seeing what Hood is emotionally capable of, will he manage to pull off Ender’s Game?  It’s certainly possible, but it’s no guarantee.

business

How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying

My family watched this 1967 musical on Netflix, so I watched it too.  It tells the comic story of a guy who wants to succeed in business without really trying.  He does this by reading a book and breaking into song every now and then.  Wow.  It was awful.  How did this ever become a popular musical?  The plot is nonsense, the songs seem completely random and rarely progress the story much, and their lyrics are drivel.  But I guess it’s a musical for girls who like preppy guys?

batman

The Dark Knight Rises

Christopher Nolan finished his Batman trilogy with this 2012 installment.  Bruce Wayne is retired and his business, Wayne Enterprises, is waning.  The economy is not so good.  And then comes Bane, physically stronger than Batman, with a terrible plot to destroy Gotham in the most torturous ways he can.  As with all Nolan’s film, this was great, I loved it, definitely a worthy successor to his previous Batman films.  But I still think The Dark Knight is the best Batman movie.  This one is about tied with Batman Begins in my mind.  Overall, fantastic trilogy.  I can’t wait to be able to sit down one day and watch them all one after the other.

So there’s June and July 2012.

Movies watched in May 2012

Here are the films I watched in May 2012.

cronos

Cronos

This 1993 film from director Guillermo del Toro is a bit of a “vampire origin” story.  An old man stumbles upon a “Cronos” device, an immortal-insect powered machine made by a 16th century alchemist.  When someone uses the device by filtering his blood through it, he becomes immortal, and quite vampire-like (he wants to drink blood and stay out of sunlight, for example).  It’s classified as a “horror” movie for its definite horror elements and visuals, but at its heart, like del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, it is really a fantastical drama; the horror elements are not there simply for their own sake.  Fun movie, even while some of the visuals were definitely quite repulsive.

bladerunner

Blade Runner: The Final Cut

I had never seen this 1982 Ridley Scott sci-fi film all the way through before, and the pieces I’d seen on TV were from the theatrical “narrated” version which I couldn’t stand.  The narration was poorly written, poorly performed, unneeded drivel.  So I was happy they made a version without the narration.  It’s certainly a visually stunning film, a very engaging world of night with smoke and rain and neon signs.  The pre-CGI special effects are remarkable.  Unfortunately the story itself was too loose for me; Deckard, as performed by Harrison Ford, needed more personality and drive for his replicant-murder quest.  And the theme of wondering what it means to be human by pondering the nature of replicants is just not a very interesting philosophical question to me; I’ve already thought about it too much myself for such a film to engage me with such philosophical predicaments.  But I can understand why the film seems so iconic.

human

The Human Condition – No Greater Love

This 1959 Japanese film is the first installment of an epic trilogy (based on Japanese novels) directed by Masaki Kobayashi.  This first film tells the tale of Kaji who is sent to supervise a prison camp where prisoners are forced to work in mines.  Kaji works to overturn the injustice he finds there, but meets very few who agree with his moral positions.  The roller coaster of drama often makes the 3-hour film feel more like a TV miniseries than a self-contained story, but it is fantastic.  A great story with great acting and constantly gripping conflict.

ivan

Ivan’s Childhood

This 1962 tragic Soviet film from director Andrei Tarkovsky tells the story of a child named Ivan (who woulda thunk?) who is orphaned by the tragedies of World War 2 and can no longer stand to merely wait on the sidelines.  So he joins Soviet army doing reconnaissance missions as they battle the Germans.  The film features great cinematographic composition, great use of sound (when the sounds and visuals don’t match, but you can tell what the film is “saying”), and great acting.  The story seemed rather sparse to me, which can sometimes be disconcerting for my American-ized tastes, but I think it was purposefully done in this case in the effort of making the film seem more like a bundle of distant childhood memories than a clear-cut this-then-that sequence of events, and from that point of view it is successful.

pirates

The Pirates: Band of Misfits

This 2012 animated feature from Aardman Animations provided some great light-hearted fare after watching those somewhat depressing black-and-white war films.  A glimpse at some non-CGI animation was also quite refreshing, as characters do not move and arc through their motions in the quite the same way.  I love the way stop-motion can feel so much more tangible than CGI, like toys come to life.  While the story itself was a bit too light-hearted for me (The Pirate Captain wants to win the “Pirate of the Year” award – don’t mind me if I can’t quite relate to the gripping conflict that implies), I loved the wild ridiculous humor of it all, and the storytellers did form a well-structured cohesive story out of it.  I had feared the humor would be too cheesy and childish for me.  Some of it was, but some of it was hilarious, and I found myself laughing out loud.  (Though the row of seven or eight children behind me did have some pre-show commentary, such as “The movie is starting!”, I became too engaged in the story of the Pirate Captain to notice whether or not they laughed at all.)  (And I had to laugh at how they changed the “leper-boat” joke to a “plague-boat” (with obvious lepers) joke.  Because you don’t want to offend lepers in a stop-motion film.  Heaven forbid children grow up to be anti-leper, having been encouraged by their youthful watchings of an otherwise harmless animated pirate movie!)  Overall, quite a fun movie.

spartacus

Spartacus

The classic 1960 film from Stanley Kubrick of course tells the tale of the slave Spartacus as he leads an unsuccessfully slave rebellion in the days of ancient Rome.  Despite some rather cheesy fight scenes, love scenes (characters might as well have just said: “You can tell how much I love you by the background music and the twinkle in my eye!”), and effects (bright red paint = blood), the story was great and I highly enjoyed it.  One of the ending scenes very much reminded me of an ending scene in the book The Hunger Games, but seemed much more authentic in how the characters ultimately responded.  Great film.

human

The Human Condition – Road to Eternity

Kaji’s adventures (if they can be called such) continue in this second film from the aforementioned trilogy.  In this film, Kaji is sent to join the army itself.  If he thought things were bad in the prison camp, the army isn’t much better.  This one reminded me a bit of Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket, in how superiors sometimes treat soldiers so inhumanly and slave-like, it is a wonder any war was able to be fought at all.  I don’t know my history, so I don’t know how much these movies compare to their real-world counterparts, but in terms of questioning the moral obligations of a man in such situations in the context of a story, this film (not Kubrick’s film) does a great job.  Great film.

nausicaa

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind

Another animated film from Studio Ghibli and director Hayao Miyazaki, this one from 1984.  This film tells the story of Nausicaa (which looks too much like the English word “nauseous” to me), who is the happy and well-loved princess of a happy community living in the “Valley of the Wind.”  The princess and her happy people live in a world full of evil toxic chemicals that have made certain areas of the world toxic.  Invaders invade the valley, seeking to grow a biological weapon (a “giant warrior”) in their valley which they hope will destroy the toxicity with fire most powerful, but what if it does more harm than good?  Who will save the day?  A pretty princess!  Overall, this one left me scratching my head.  I didn’t understand characters’ motivations, the overall plot seemed too all-over-the-place, and I tend to be annoyed with unauthentic depictions of young royalty being so naturally well-loved by royal subjects.  The depiction of believable fantasy cultures, however, was quite fun.

road

Road to Perdition

This 2002 crime film from director Sam Mendes takes place in the 1930s.  It tells the story of Mike Sullivan (an Italian – just kidding) who works for a mob boss.  When his mobbish ways indirectly get his wife and son killed, he and his surviving son set out for justice/revenge.  (Not sure the line between the two is very easy to distinguish when both parties have already denied certain moral standards.)  A tragic but great film with a wonderful score by Thomas Newman and incredible cinematography by the late master Conrad Hall (who won an Oscar for it).  I had heard someone describe the film by saying “every scene is like a painting” and it’s true.  I especially love the scene in which Mike’s son (Mike Sullivan junior) is spying on his father through a hole near the floor and we watch the scene play out from his perspective.  And the scene in which Jude Law’s character is walking towards the camera and the camera moves closer and zooms out creating the effect of the world warping around him (opposite of the camera moving away and zooming in, popularly used in Goodfellas).  And the scene is which it’s dark and wet and rainy and we still see wonderfully defined silhouettes of mob men as they walk to a dark car before meeting their dark fates.  Worth watching for the cinematography alone.  Great film.

once

Once Upon a Time – Season 1

Not a movie, but I put TV seasons in here too.  Once Upon a Time tells the story of Disney-fied fairy tale characters who are somehow “cursed” into the modern world in an act of revenge, and the only one who can break the spell is Miss Swan.  (Not the MADtv character, which would’ve been more interesting.)  I’m not really a fan of “fairy tales in the modern world!” concept, as I don’t think retelling a story in a different setting is at all creative, but fortunately Once Upon a Time doesn’t quite do that; it simply remakes the fairy tale characters into modern counterparts.  I still found the writing to be a bit too simple, but it seems to be a much more family-oriented show than anything else on TV at that timeslot on a major network.  Disney versions of fairy tales always seem to have something annoyingly unauthentic about them, and the romances in Once Upon a Time are no different.  Still, I find it very interesting to see the storytellers playing with the fantastical elements they’d probably otherwise stay away from; like the cancelled fantasy show Legend of the Seeker, I find these shows inspiring from a storytelling point of view; for me, there are often little nuggets of ideas my story-plotting mind can play with, even if the stories I steal them from aren’t completely engaging.  You know what I mean?  So I’ll keep watching for Season 2.

fringe

Fringe – Season 4

This season of Fringe was not quite as strong as previous seasons have been, but I think it’s because the producers made the over-arching story too complicated and are now trying to answer questions before the series ends with Season 5.  I appreciate that they’re trying to answer questions before it’s too late, but I wish they wouldn’t have made the over-arching story so complicated to begin with.  Now they are paying the price.  It’ll be interesting to see how the series ends, but I think Season 3 was the overall strongest so far (though that animated episode from Season 3 was absolutely awful).

House

House – Season 8

I will miss House.  The last season managed to stay strong despite Cuddy disappearing.  I didn’t much care for the final episode.  It was nice to get the dead characters back, but in the end they raised the stakes so high that the final “joke” was just yawn-inducing.  Overall, though, great season, great series.

judgment

Judgment at Nuremberg

This 1961 film directed by Stanley Kramer tells the story of judge Dan Haywood (played by Spencer Tracy) who travels to Germany after the fall of the Nazi regime to act as a judge in the Nuremberg trials, meant to judge the German judges for crimes against humanity during the Nazi regime.  The film does not try to show how and why racism and the Holocaust were evil (we all know that).  Rather, the film lets us question the role of these German judges.  We know they weren’t saints, but they didn’t directly even know about the Holocaust themselves, so were they that bad?  How bad were they?  For a moment, I was half-afraid the judge was going to make the wrong decision.  Great film.  I especially loved the last lines.  Ernst Janning was one of the judges on trial.  He begs Haywood, the judge, to believe him when he says he didn’t realize so many millions of people would be killed:

Ernst Janning: Judge Haywood… the reason I asked you to come: Those people, those millions of people… I never knew it would come to that. You must believe it, you must believe it!
Judge Dan Haywood: Herr Janning, it came to that the first time you sentenced a man to death you knew to be innocent.

french

The French Connection

I’m tempted to say the real “French connection” was the influence of that handheld camera look that was popular with French filmmakers near that time, but it was based on a book, so probably not.  Anyway, this 1971 crime film tells the true (but fictionalized) story of two police men who uncover and stop a large drug smuggling.  Fun movie, especially with its famous car chase scene (the end of which is completely given away in the film’s iconic poster).

contraband

Contraband

This 2012 film starring Mark Wahlberg tells the story of a ex-drug-smuggler who’s forced back into the world of smuggling to get his family out of danger (which his brother-in-law’s crimes have put them in).  Fun movie.

double

The Double

This 2011 film tells the story of an ex-killer who’s also a government agent investigating himself.  When a younger agent comes close to discovering his secret, he must return to his killing ways and try to find a way out of his deadly predicament.  Another fun movie.

pajamas

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

The premise of this 2008 film was interesting.  During the Holocaust, a young boy, son of a Nazi official, befriends another boy in “striped pajamas” (or “pyjamas” for foreigners who favour spelling things wrong) – a prisoner in a prison camp who we know is doomed to die.  Some critics have complained that the film’s premise is simply too farfetched.  I can forgive the film that.  But I have three complaints.  Firstly, I don’t think the film explored nearly as many possibilities as it could have.  The film seems to draw (or try to draw) most of its emotional power from us, the audience, already understanding in retrospect how tragic the Holocaust and Nazi racism was.  “Remember how bad the Holocaust was?  Yeah.  Feel that.”  The movie did little to try to create that emotion itself in terms of character relationships; instead we, the audience, must provide it by reminding ourselves how evil those Nazis were.  The film could’ve done so much more with the character relationships.  A wife who doesn’t like what she sees, but turns the other way.  A sister who convinces herself that because her father is a Nazi, Nazis must be a force of good.  A kid in a prison camp who doesn’t understand why he’s being considered an enemy.  The film hardly touched on any of these inner-character conflicts.  Secondly, I’m not sure I agree with this currently popular notion that children are never racists themselves, but are taught to be racists through parental or societal indoctrination.  If that were true, when was racism invented?  I think racism is an unfortunate byproduct of the ways in which humans naturally think (by categorizing things, and labeling things as dangerous, however prejudiced that may be).  In some ways, it is a survival technique (if someone has these traits, don’t trust them) that has become farfetched, irrational, and immoral.  But it can develop in children just as easily as adults; it does not need to be taught.  Lastly, the film just seemed too inauthentic.  Perhaps this relates to my first critique.  Because so many character elements were left unexplored, the characters were left displaying the simplest and most cliché emotions they were capable of, as if the line between good and evil during something like the Holocaust should be as transparent as a battle between a princess and an evil stepmother in a Disney cartoon.  And it’s a very strange combo when you try to mix the weight of tragedy of the Holocaust with the simple and clear morality of Snow White.  Judgment at Nuremberg did a much better job in this regard.  We already know Nazis were evil and the Holocaust was tragic; give us something deeper!  One last critique (with a SPOILER alert): at the end of the film, Bruno sneaks into the prison camp to help his prison friend Schmuel look for his missing father.  How the heck does Bruno think he can help?  How does he know what Schmuel’s father looks like?  It’s such a forced way to get Bruno into the camp that what ends up happening to Bruno completely loses any dramatic power it may have had.  Ultimately this film failed to live up to its potential.

gandhi

Gandhi

“They may torture my body, break my bones, even kill me.  Then they will have my dead body.  Not my obedience.”  This 1982 film from director Richard Attenborough truly spared no expense.  (I had to.)  It obviously tells the story of Gandhi.  While one film, even a three hour one, can only scratch the surface of Gandhi’s work, the film does a superb job of portraying “Gandhi’s best moments” while stringing together a coherent and engaging life-encompassing story.  While I thought Ben Kingsley looked rather odd in his Indian make-up throughout the film, his acting was (as it always is) pretty much perfect.  The cinematography, the writing, the music – everything came together wonderfully for this film.  While I don’t agree with all of the Gandhi’s philosophies (at least as they are portrayed in the film, or maybe I just misunderstand some of them), this was certainly a fantastic film (and it looks great on blu-ray).

Explorations in cinema shall continue, I hope.